Sr. Dorothy Schuette
Inauguration
Day- Anger in America
“Hope has two
beautiful daughters – their names are anger and courage; anger at the way
things are, and courage to see that they do not remain the way they are.” – St.
Augustine
What
we are experiencing at this time in our country is a lot of anger, seemingly
about everything political, social, environmental; restrictions on our
liberties, disquiet within our souls. How shall we listen to God about this?
For what do we pray? Anger is not the problem in itself. Misdirected
expressions of anger that result in violence are.
As
St. Augustine reminds us, anger is a natural response that rises in us when we
know that things are not as they should be. The seriousness of the situation
calls forth a more or less intense feeling of anger. The Good News is that this
is the root of justice making. It energizes us to follow in the footsteps of
Jesus, and of all those persecuted for standing up for the poor and
marginalized such as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr whom we celebrated earlier this
week. They have shown us that actions flowing from Holy Anger are measured by
the cost to themselves, not damage to another.
Let
us remember that Anger has a sister, Courage. Courage calls out our fears.
“What fears?”, we might ask today. If we look deep within us we may find many
specific answers. Author of Daring
Greatly, Brené Brown suggests that a basic fear shared by many is that of
“scarcity”, that is, there is never enough time, never enough money, that we
are never pretty enough, rich enough,
good enough, etc. The heart of scarcity is greed, shame, comparison and
disengagement. She further poses the question that we can ask of our nation
today, “Do we lack the empathy to be compassionate?” Do we fear that America is
too small for all of us? Too inadequate for all that God asks of us?
I
am hoping that it is not. My prayer is
that all of us who are citizens and those to aspire to be will discover that
our connections are truer and stronger than what separates us. May the Holy
Spirit give us the wisdom to discern the way forward, to discover what unites
us and help us trust rather than fear each other.
The
mother of Anger and Courage is Hope. Let us put on the garment of Hope- grow
into it, let it comfort us, warm us, and enable us to open our arms to receive
each other as the family we truly are.